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Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1973-11-15

Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1973-11-15, page 01

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21^ Serving Columbtts and Central Ohio Jewish CommujMty^O\\l
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VOL.. 51 NO. 47
NOVEMBER 15, 1973 - HESHVAN 20
Devoted to Amarpfn and Jewish Idi
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BRUSSELS (WNS) — The nine Common Market countries have adopted a draft resolution calling on Israel to end its occupation of all territories it has held since 1967. The resolution prepared by Foreign Ministers Sir Alec Douglas-Home of Britain and Michel Jobert of France will be reconsidered for final approval at a meeting Dec. 15 in Copenhagen. The action came in the face of a threat of a cutoff of oil by the Arab states. Holland already has been completely deprived of oil. However, newspapers in, Britain and Germany accused the nine countries of giving in to Arab blackmail.
New York (WNS) — Abraham D. Beame won 57 percent of the vote to become the first Jew to be elected as mayor of New Y$rk City. The 67-year-old city controller will be New York's 104th mayor: Beame, as expected, received his largest pluralities in the Jewish middle'class districts of Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens, but he also gathered nearly 70 percent of the vote in the city's Black and Hispanic neighborhoods. Beame, who became mayor after 23 years in public office, won born in London March 20, 1906 and was ' taken to New York by his family as a three-month-old infant. His family name of Birnbaum was legally changed when Beame was six years old. Beame is active in Jewish affairs and is a member of an Or¬ thodox synagogue in Brooklyn. He refused to cam¬ paign on Saturdays! ',' ' , ' ' v ' '
WASHINGTON (WNS) ^-Sen..-WalW.-Fr^lVlSii»ialg~ (b.j'Mlrin.) lias suggested that'if the Arabs embargo^ ; oil to the United States then the U.S.' should not supply 'them'with food. Mondale made his suggestion in Detroit at the 60th anniversary dinner of the Michigan Ahti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith. "I hope the Secretary of State will emphasize in talks with the < "Arab countries that the United States cannot be ex¬ pected to produce agricultural products to feed their people if they withhold the petroleum needed to run our tractors," Mondale declared. Earlier Foreign Agriculture, a publication of the Agriculture-Depart¬ ment, reported that the United States is the prime source of grain and other farm products for the Middle East. ' '
Evening With B.B. Caplan Sponsored By Agudas Achim
Kissinger's Five Point Formula For Peace Reported Accepted By Israel And Egypt
JERUSALEM (WNS) - Chances of maintaining the cease-fire between Israel arid Egypt and starting negotiations for a peace settlement seemed to have improved after it was reported that both Israel and Egypt have accepted a formula proposed by U.S. Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. The formula, which has been accepted in principle by Israel, provides according to sources: a permanent supply corridor through Israeli lines for the encircled Egyptian Third Army under United Nations control; an immediate ex¬ change of wounded prisoners of war to be followed by a
general exchange of POWs; lifting of the Egyptian blockade of the straits of Bab el Mqndeb; a realignment of the cease-fire lines; and peace negotiations to follow if the first four conditions are to be honored. The formula was submitted to
Premier Golda Meir by Joseph J. Sisco, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Eastern Affairs. Sisco and Harold Saunders, director of Middle Eastern Affairs on the National Security Council, arrived suddenly in Israel
from Cairo where they had attended Kissinger's meeting with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat at which Sadat had apparently accepted Kissinger's proposals. Joining Mrs. Meir in meeting Sisco were
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 16)
Bikel Says Latest Middle East Peace Is Result Of Egypt's Military Success
by BILL COHEN Chronicle Special Reporter
Egypt's mild success on the battlefield may be one of
the reasons that country signed its recent "peace" agreement with Israel, according to Theodore Bikel. Bikel, in Columbus'earlier this week for a Torah Academy fundraiser and a breakfast at Hillel, told The
"had achieved a modicum of dignity" that allowed them "to come to-a peace table with an equanimity and without all those chips on their shoulders." The actor and folksinger ' added that peace was
Chronicle, "Egypt, for the ^"almost impossible" after •^irst-,timevJin its modern „,the 1967 war "because the military history, acquitted Arab psychological makeup itself rather well and found its manhood, if you want to call it that. Egypt can come to a peace table without any loss of face and indeed with a legitimate claim to its own people that they were not -defeated." Bikel said the Egyptians
couldn't countenance it.
Bikel went on to describe Zionism as a "national liberation movement."
"This includes an awareness of oneself as belonging to a people; regardless of where one
(CONTINUED ON PAGE IS)
On Sunday, November 25th, at 8 p.m., the Brotherhood and Sisterhood of the Agudas Achirr. Synagogue is sponsoring an evening with Dr. B. B. Caplan who will relate his firsthand impressions and personal experiences of the war in Israel. Dr. Caplan had volunteered his services as a physician who left for Israel the day after the outbreak of the war. Dr. Caplan visited both the Golan Heights and the Sinai fronts and worked at the Ashkelon Hospital in Israel. Dr, Caplan will detail his impressions and contacts with the wounded.
Dr. Caplan has been associated with many projects, having received 31 Humanitarian Awards and Recognitions, some of which are the following: Project Hope and Project Vietnam
Awards; the American Medical Association Service
Award; Service Awards'
from CARE and MEDICO.
Dr. Caplan has received the Public Relations Award of America; the Sanford I. Lakin B'nai B'rith Award; the Man of the Year Award
Dr. B. B. Caplan
from the Downtown Lion's Club; the Y.M.C.A. Service Award; Sideliner's Award-, East High School Award; the "Flowers for the Living" Award from the Agudas Achim Brotherhood; the Sertoma Service Award and Kiwanis Award. Dr. Caplan
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 16)
Governor John J. Gilligan signs a proclamation in recognition of the Centennial of the founding of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations at Cin¬ cinnati in 1873, a force in the religious life of the state and nation.
Looking on are Dr. Edward D. Kiner, rabbi of Temple Israel, 5419 E. Broad Street, Governor John J. Gilligan, William L. Glick and Norman Folpe, president and vice-president of the Temple which will receive recognition as a charter member of the Union when it meets at an historical Centenary Convocation November 9-14 at the New York Hilton Hotel.
Temple Israel Recognized As UAHC Founding Congregation
Temple Israel, 5419 E. Broad St., will receive recognition as one of 34 founding congregations at the Centennial celebration of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations meeting in New York, November 9-14.
More than Three Thousand delegates from 710 member congregations of the Reform movement throughout the United States and Canada will deliberate on the next century as they celebrate the past 100 years at sessions to be held at the New York Hilton Hotel. I Guiding principles for Reform Judaism will be discussed as well as new
Rabbi Urges Jews To Put Car In Garage On Sabbath
models for the future cen¬ tered around the theme "To give to you a future and a hope". Special events will include the world prenflere at Carnegie Hall of a work' commissioned for the Centennial ' by French composer, Darius Milhaud and Elie Wiesel, author.
Roberta Peters, Metropolitan opera star, will be the soloist for tbe per¬ formance of "A Song Lost and Found", deriving from one of the 13 Articles of Faith of Maimonides.
The UAHC was founded at Cincinnati by Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise whose visions of a united American Jewry
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 15)
In a letter to his congregation, Rabbi David Stavsky of the Beth Jacob Synagogue urged the entire Jewish community to put their cars in the garage for the Sabbath Day. The letter read:
"If the non-Jewish people in the Netherlands can deprive themselves of the use of their cars on a Sunday then the American Jewish community in keeping with .the spirit of The Holy Sab¬ bath can surely once and for all learn to walk to
synagogue and to temple on The Sabbath Day. The conservation of gasoline and oil during the present Middle East crisis brought about by the Arab blackmail of all freedom loving countries, is a must for ev,ery Jew", said the rabbi. "Walking to shule or temple is a matter of habit. I have found it is usually the'best hours that I spend with my children and members of my family, as we usually discuss so many different topics and subjects.
(CONTINUED QN PAGE 14)
Trade legislation Postponed
week, from
WASHINGTON, (JTA) - House Speaker Carl Albert (D. Okla.) acting at President Nixon's personal request, has for the second time postponed House consideration of the Trade Reform Act of 1973 because of the Mills-Vanik proposals affecting Soviet emigration policy tied to it. In accepting the President's request, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency was informed, Albert in¬ dicated he would .postpone calling up the bill for detente
for one week, from the legislative period beginning Nov. 12 to the period starting Nov. 19. Later, the White House for the first time publicly linked- the Nixon request for delay on the bill to the Soviet-American negotiations on the Middle East crisis. The trade bill originally had been scheduled for final action October 18 but was post¬ poned when Nixon asked Albert and House Majority
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 10)
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BRUSSELS (WNS) — The nine Common Market countries have adopted a draft resolution calling on Israel to end its occupation of all territories it has held since 1967. The resolution prepared by Foreign Ministers Sir Alec Douglas-Home of Britain and Michel Jobert of France will be reconsidered for final approval at a meeting Dec. 15 in Copenhagen. The action came in the face of a threat of a cutoff of oil by the Arab states. Holland already has been completely deprived of oil. However, newspapers in, Britain and Germany accused the nine countries of giving in to Arab blackmail.
New York (WNS) — Abraham D. Beame won 57 percent of the vote to become the first Jew to be elected as mayor of New Y$rk City. The 67-year-old city controller will be New York's 104th mayor: Beame, as expected, received his largest pluralities in the Jewish middle'class districts of Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens, but he also gathered nearly 70 percent of the vote in the city's Black and Hispanic neighborhoods. Beame, who became mayor after 23 years in public office, won born in London March 20, 1906 and was ' taken to New York by his family as a three-month-old infant. His family name of Birnbaum was legally changed when Beame was six years old. Beame is active in Jewish affairs and is a member of an Or¬ thodox synagogue in Brooklyn. He refused to cam¬ paign on Saturdays! ',' ' , ' ' v ' '
WASHINGTON (WNS) ^-Sen..-WalW.-Fr^lVlSii»ialg~ (b.j'Mlrin.) lias suggested that'if the Arabs embargo^ ; oil to the United States then the U.S.' should not supply 'them'with food. Mondale made his suggestion in Detroit at the 60th anniversary dinner of the Michigan Ahti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith. "I hope the Secretary of State will emphasize in talks with the < "Arab countries that the United States cannot be ex¬ pected to produce agricultural products to feed their people if they withhold the petroleum needed to run our tractors," Mondale declared. Earlier Foreign Agriculture, a publication of the Agriculture-Depart¬ ment, reported that the United States is the prime source of grain and other farm products for the Middle East. ' '
Evening With B.B. Caplan Sponsored By Agudas Achim
Kissinger's Five Point Formula For Peace Reported Accepted By Israel And Egypt
JERUSALEM (WNS) - Chances of maintaining the cease-fire between Israel arid Egypt and starting negotiations for a peace settlement seemed to have improved after it was reported that both Israel and Egypt have accepted a formula proposed by U.S. Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. The formula, which has been accepted in principle by Israel, provides according to sources: a permanent supply corridor through Israeli lines for the encircled Egyptian Third Army under United Nations control; an immediate ex¬ change of wounded prisoners of war to be followed by a
general exchange of POWs; lifting of the Egyptian blockade of the straits of Bab el Mqndeb; a realignment of the cease-fire lines; and peace negotiations to follow if the first four conditions are to be honored. The formula was submitted to
Premier Golda Meir by Joseph J. Sisco, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Eastern Affairs. Sisco and Harold Saunders, director of Middle Eastern Affairs on the National Security Council, arrived suddenly in Israel
from Cairo where they had attended Kissinger's meeting with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat at which Sadat had apparently accepted Kissinger's proposals. Joining Mrs. Meir in meeting Sisco were
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 16)
Bikel Says Latest Middle East Peace Is Result Of Egypt's Military Success
by BILL COHEN Chronicle Special Reporter
Egypt's mild success on the battlefield may be one of
the reasons that country signed its recent "peace" agreement with Israel, according to Theodore Bikel. Bikel, in Columbus'earlier this week for a Torah Academy fundraiser and a breakfast at Hillel, told The
"had achieved a modicum of dignity" that allowed them "to come to-a peace table with an equanimity and without all those chips on their shoulders." The actor and folksinger ' added that peace was
Chronicle, "Egypt, for the ^"almost impossible" after •^irst-,timevJin its modern „,the 1967 war "because the military history, acquitted Arab psychological makeup itself rather well and found its manhood, if you want to call it that. Egypt can come to a peace table without any loss of face and indeed with a legitimate claim to its own people that they were not -defeated." Bikel said the Egyptians
couldn't countenance it.
Bikel went on to describe Zionism as a "national liberation movement."
"This includes an awareness of oneself as belonging to a people; regardless of where one
(CONTINUED ON PAGE IS)
On Sunday, November 25th, at 8 p.m., the Brotherhood and Sisterhood of the Agudas Achirr. Synagogue is sponsoring an evening with Dr. B. B. Caplan who will relate his firsthand impressions and personal experiences of the war in Israel. Dr. Caplan had volunteered his services as a physician who left for Israel the day after the outbreak of the war. Dr. Caplan visited both the Golan Heights and the Sinai fronts and worked at the Ashkelon Hospital in Israel. Dr, Caplan will detail his impressions and contacts with the wounded.
Dr. Caplan has been associated with many projects, having received 31 Humanitarian Awards and Recognitions, some of which are the following: Project Hope and Project Vietnam
Awards; the American Medical Association Service
Award; Service Awards'
from CARE and MEDICO.
Dr. Caplan has received the Public Relations Award of America; the Sanford I. Lakin B'nai B'rith Award; the Man of the Year Award
Dr. B. B. Caplan
from the Downtown Lion's Club; the Y.M.C.A. Service Award; Sideliner's Award-, East High School Award; the "Flowers for the Living" Award from the Agudas Achim Brotherhood; the Sertoma Service Award and Kiwanis Award. Dr. Caplan
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 16)
Governor John J. Gilligan signs a proclamation in recognition of the Centennial of the founding of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations at Cin¬ cinnati in 1873, a force in the religious life of the state and nation.
Looking on are Dr. Edward D. Kiner, rabbi of Temple Israel, 5419 E. Broad Street, Governor John J. Gilligan, William L. Glick and Norman Folpe, president and vice-president of the Temple which will receive recognition as a charter member of the Union when it meets at an historical Centenary Convocation November 9-14 at the New York Hilton Hotel.
Temple Israel Recognized As UAHC Founding Congregation
Temple Israel, 5419 E. Broad St., will receive recognition as one of 34 founding congregations at the Centennial celebration of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations meeting in New York, November 9-14.
More than Three Thousand delegates from 710 member congregations of the Reform movement throughout the United States and Canada will deliberate on the next century as they celebrate the past 100 years at sessions to be held at the New York Hilton Hotel. I Guiding principles for Reform Judaism will be discussed as well as new
Rabbi Urges Jews To Put Car In Garage On Sabbath
models for the future cen¬ tered around the theme "To give to you a future and a hope". Special events will include the world prenflere at Carnegie Hall of a work' commissioned for the Centennial ' by French composer, Darius Milhaud and Elie Wiesel, author.
Roberta Peters, Metropolitan opera star, will be the soloist for tbe per¬ formance of "A Song Lost and Found", deriving from one of the 13 Articles of Faith of Maimonides.
The UAHC was founded at Cincinnati by Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise whose visions of a united American Jewry
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 15)
In a letter to his congregation, Rabbi David Stavsky of the Beth Jacob Synagogue urged the entire Jewish community to put their cars in the garage for the Sabbath Day. The letter read:
"If the non-Jewish people in the Netherlands can deprive themselves of the use of their cars on a Sunday then the American Jewish community in keeping with .the spirit of The Holy Sab¬ bath can surely once and for all learn to walk to
synagogue and to temple on The Sabbath Day. The conservation of gasoline and oil during the present Middle East crisis brought about by the Arab blackmail of all freedom loving countries, is a must for ev,ery Jew", said the rabbi. "Walking to shule or temple is a matter of habit. I have found it is usually the'best hours that I spend with my children and members of my family, as we usually discuss so many different topics and subjects.
(CONTINUED QN PAGE 14)
Trade legislation Postponed
week, from
WASHINGTON, (JTA) - House Speaker Carl Albert (D. Okla.) acting at President Nixon's personal request, has for the second time postponed House consideration of the Trade Reform Act of 1973 because of the Mills-Vanik proposals affecting Soviet emigration policy tied to it. In accepting the President's request, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency was informed, Albert in¬ dicated he would .postpone calling up the bill for detente
for one week, from the legislative period beginning Nov. 12 to the period starting Nov. 19. Later, the White House for the first time publicly linked- the Nixon request for delay on the bill to the Soviet-American negotiations on the Middle East crisis. The trade bill originally had been scheduled for final action October 18 but was post¬ poned when Nixon asked Albert and House Majority
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 10)
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